y a ” THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER il 1897 BEYOND THEIR POWERS, | - | Work That Can Only be Done by Diamond Dyes According to instructions iseved by makers of crude and scrap grease dyes t ey advive as follows, “Very Jarge cr heavy articie®, fFuch as tweed Ciolnh, «tc., should | only be dved by expert dvers.” | modesty anu ltis really refreshing to occasionally find going hand io band as far as poor, weak dyes are concerned. Package dyes and other prepared ded ior ho nonesty dyes e work that the ordinars ’ nter ewiie Cannot use fur dyeing a hus snd’s overcoat or suit are pot worth using | for the colorog of the lightest fabrics o1 |} materials. Just think of it, tweeda and hs and heavyv eoods mst go to pro- fessional or expert dyers because they ‘ : \ t Fi I 10h. 24.5 m. F mh. o 7.6m.. Last Quarter, 17th, Oh. 9.6m., a. New \ 2} om. OSm : i ; ’ 1) » Dav of Week | Sun Sun High ' Rises pets | Water m. | i 1{™M ; lg 47 $41) 2 49 » } v i aw ; ” 31 y 601 a7) 515 ~ i OR 4 | : 52 | ub) 6S 5 V eh? | ot i 45 : BA ft te Ss yf) a y s a 18 4 = 30 | 10 29 a “ 7 an ¥ : oR > oO 4v VW me : 7 | 12 <> | al 3 2.) Lo ‘} 43 ; ee ee | oe 7 | 23 | 0 37 | 7 S | »} 127) 1S | a\ oO : 1 ; » > | - w | 20 8 31 | 17 ‘ 12 j 1 } oe is 12 Is 5 48 rod 4 aa 6 34 ma , 18 16 8S 06 mn ‘ 17 = | 917 a i ae ‘ { 10 2} ; = - Ll SO tee | I3| 1237 25 | - v ~1 | - 13 28 + | ' aa | oa "7 ~ ; ¥ 24 ll : 25, 1] 038 eit i 10 1 35 29 | Monday 26 _ . 40 30 | Tuesday 7 23 | ti - } and perfectiy canvot be dyed with the common imitaiion or soap grease dyes! W he n iyeing, Diamond Dves are used for home tweed avd cloth overcosts and men’s and boys’ suits can be dyed easily if the directions the are followed. Diamond Dyes have (he oeceasary pevetrating power to ive the very heaviest materials, and to du the work wel]. Any person, man or woman, can dye any material, light heavy, perfectly with Diamond Dves. Mora): Use D.amond Dy es forthe home dyeing work ; they are tue most penetrat- ing, Strongest, purest and give the best resu'ts, on envelope or P&E Island Pailway On and after MONDAY, 4th Oct, 1897, the trains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun- days excepted,) as under. frains Out : oe Trains In ward. Read! STATIONS. ward. Read down. Up- aoa ee 8 20) 6 15) - Charlottetown ... @ 2) 9 40 3 52| 6 29 .. Royalty Junction. 616 919 4 42) 7 03...North Wiltshire. | 5 42 8 30 4 58, 7 13)--Hunter River... | § 52) 8 15 & 34) 7 37}. . Bradalbane...... 5 O08) 7 37 f 44| 7 43\.-Emerald.. ..... 5 02] 7 2 5 59, 7 & .. Freetown .2..... 452734 6 S 07), Kensingtes CoS E : 38 : = 6 55 8 SOA org; 435 6: 1 40 8 45,Lv | vas { Lr. 4 9011 00 2 02 & 59|--Miscouche ...... 8 4210 37 2 4) 9 17|-- Wellington ...... / 3 2810 10 3 18] 9 45|-.Port Hill ....... 3 00, 9 21 4 3310 25)-.O’Leary.......-- | 211) 8 0&8 5 01.10 31}. .Bloomfeld denddt 1 55) 7 38 "5 4911 15) --Alberton.... +. (1% 7 02 "6 45.11 55) -- Tignish coos ccoeli® BORG Ee OR i, el I FS M. A. M\P. M. A. M.|P. M. 6 30' 3 cg SR a 910 410 6 50 8 24)..Royalty Junction) § 59/ 3 50 7 23 3 47|..Bedford .....-.-| 8 32) 317 8 25) 4 15)...Mt Stewart......../ 8 10} 2 45° 8 45) 4 43|..Morell........+-| 7 17| 2 00 9 14.5 O4).-St. Peters ....+.| 7 15) 1 30 0 Ol} 5 38)|..Bear River ......| 6 41/12 43 (45, 6 10) .Souris.... ...... | 6 10/12 00 A. M.|P, M. ia, MIP. M. A. M.j@. M. |A, M.|P. M. 8 10) 4 15).. Mt. Stewart ....| 8 05) 2 35 9 22) 5 08)..Cardigan........ 71Z1B 2 45, 5 20)..Georgetown ....| 6 55) 1 Oo a, MIF. Me Se B-ye P, M. A. M. '5 5 ..Emerald ee 7 W@W # : ..Cape Traverse .. 6 3) . MF A. M. Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time. o. A euane. ‘. pore. a ntenden Gen Govt. Charlottetown. Sioncton. WR. Ra‘ way Wfiee. J uad,, » re» if Wants, Lost, Found &e W ANTED.—A girl for general housework. Must be well recommended, Apply to Mr. Geo. Carter. W ANTED.—A Man Servant. — Apply at is office. nov? LOS&T.—On Snndavr FEv’g, between St Paul’s Church and Kindergarten Corner. a Feather Boa, novy tf AGENTS get filty cents on each dollar: no experience necersary. Write for agent's outfit, Address The Catholic News, § Burciay St.. New York. oct 23 41 WANTED. A nurse fortwo children. Refer- ences required. Apply to Mrs. |), B Stewart Enston St. novs—3i pd WAN YED—An experienced general serv «nt to goto &tJohn Must be well recommended Apply to Mrs J F Gallagher, Grafton St west nov 5—3i WANTFD.—A servaat for general house- work, reference required. Apply to Mrs Geo, E Fall, nov 3eod tf WANTED.—At once, a boy for restaurant Apply to A. N. Large. nov 1—tf W ANTED—A cook; $7 toa competent per- sop. References required. Apply at this office. nov3—tf FOR SALE CHEAP.—4 Mason & Hamlin Organ, style C, has two seta of reeds, in good order. Apply at the Examiner Office + e127—eod 2wks W ANTED.—Two girls sor Dining Room, good address, — eee well recommended, ood wages to t £ person. Ap at e Queen Hotel between the hours Or ten and twelve o’clock a, m. oct 2 tf guar Tenders for Lease Hillsborough Skating Rink For ensuing Skating Season, from Nov. 2° th, inst., to Ist of May, next, will be re- ce'ved up to 15th November, inst, at noun. Addresses vader cover, marked “Tender fcr lease of Skating Rink” . D. C. McLEOD, Nov 1—2 Wk eod, Testi- monial C. P. Fletcher, Esq. Dear Str,—I do not wish to return to Montreal without expressing my gratitude to you forthe very excellent Bell Piano that you placed at my dispogal for my recital, I have tried many Canadian Pianos of different manufac- turers,nd must say that, con- sidering the size of the instru- ment, I have never found one to equal it for depth and bril- lianey of tone. The action is quite as elastic and respons- ive as in American. Upright Pianos of the highest grade. Again thanking you, very sincerely, I remain, Yours, Frep. E. Morris P, E. Island Agency, . PH Opera House Building C. P. Yeo Agent at Summerside. een Oysters Oysters __ Oysters JOY! JOY! JOY! =r Victoria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters served. im every style; Lunches and dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection. JOHN P. JOY Victoria CAFE Gt George St..... Neuralria In the heac is almost invariably caused b decayed and apscessed teeth. Don't wufler n essly when you can be releived in a few hours and cured in a few days by the careful treatment we will give you. DENTIST. Painless extraction of teeth *_ OVERCOME BY SVK, | fhe Danger of Fighting SabceMar Fires In New York. In the series of articles on the New York fire department in St. Nicholas, Mr. Charles T. Hill contributed one on ‘‘The Risks of a Fireman’s Life.’’ Mr. Hill says: Ata subecellar fire that occurred one nighta few years ago, on lower Broad- way, I saw over a dozen men laid out on the sidewalk, overcome by the smoke. A grewsome sight it was, too, with the dim figures of the ambulance surgeons, Jan- terns in hand, working over them, and the thick smoke for a background. were brave fellows who had dashed in with the Times of hose, only to be dragged out afterward by their com- nearly suffocated by the thick, These rades, Stiiing smmoke that poured in volumes from every opening itm the basement. Over 150 feet of *‘dead lights,’’ or grating, over the sidewalk had to be brokenin thag night before the cellars were relieved suffi- ciently of the smoke with which they were charged to allow the men to go in and extinguish the fire. This required the corabined work of the crews of five hook and ladder companies, who broke in the ironwork with the butt ends of their axes—the hardest kind of work. But the newspapers the following morning meroly gave this flrea {0 or 12 line notice, men- tioning the location and the estimated loss, and adding that ‘‘it was a severe fire to subdue.’’ No word of the punishment and suffering the men were forced to face before this fire was under control; no mention of the dash after dash into tho cellar with the heavy line of hose, only to be driven back to the street by the smoke, or to be dragged out afterward nearly un- conscious; nor of the thud after thud with the heavy axes aon the thick iron grating that required 20 or 830 blows before any impression could be made on it. This was muscle straining, lung taxing work that the average man has to face only once in a lifetime, but the firemen in a large city have it always before them, and each tap on the telegraph may mean the signal to sumwora them toa tusk that requires the utmosé strength and nerve. ON THE ST. ANCE’S LINKS, Mr. Topper’s Remarkable Drive and the Depressing Influence of the Scot. ‘*‘Now, some men are made golfers,’’ said Mr. Foozle, ‘‘and some are born so. Iam not. But the very worst golfer I ever heard of was Topper of thisclub. I’ve seen that man slice the bati so that it would fly in a circle, and once—only once —lI saw it fa]l on the tee from which he'd driven it. But that, as I say, was ex- ceptional—really a remarkable piece of luck, I think. I offered to bet he couldn’t do it again, but he wouldn't take me up. Topper had no sporting blood. ‘‘The fact that the Scotch have had so much to do with the game of golf,’’ con- tinued Mr. Foozle, ‘‘accounts undoubtedly for the lack of humorand fun connected with the game. Now, they laid out these ‘links’ on the hill back o’ me recently— part on the bill, most on the hillside, and some in the ditch, They called one hole the high hole, one the yalley hole, and another the hill hole. “‘The greens com mittee was composed of two Scotchmen and an American. I hap- pen to know, sir, that that American did everything but go on his knees to these Scots to get ’em tocall the holes high, lew and jack. Any American could see that they ought to be called high, low, jack, and the ninth hole—these were the sixth, seventh and eighth holes—should nat’ully be the ‘game’ hole. ‘*$But those Scotchmen voted him down. They'd never heard o’ calling holes by such names. Badminton said ‘nothin *baout it.’ So the American was defeated end the little thistle waved triumphantly ever Scotland und Acrica.’’—New York Sun. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL BOOKS Scribblers,..Foolscap, Ink Pencils, Pens, Note Books etc , ets. Cheapest and Best at MeMillan.& Hornsby’s QUEEN STREET TEETH Teeth Extracted Skillfully. No Fictitious Method. No Indiscrim- inate use Cocaine. No Injurious “After Eifects. DR. J. P MURRAY, 145 Quven Street, Physical Culture & Dancing MISS H. MACDONALD Will re-open her Classes on Thursday October 7.h. Private lessons at any hour. Adults at8 p.m. Juveniles at 4 p, m. Fancy Dancing a specia:ty. Full particulars on application at her ooms in “Masonic Building. or at the : ownal St. esidence of John A. Macdonald, Esq. oct Ta _— A JOKER’S FAME. Berne Interesting Reminiseonees of the Famous Humorist, Sydney Smith. Sydney Smith wasa political reform- er ana one of the foremost men of let- ters of his time, but he is remembered chiefiy as a hvmorist who could enliven a dinner table with his wit. Like other wise nven who have a talent for making people he was jealous of his reputation for good sense. When he reprinted his essayw from the EdinSurgzh Review, his ebject, giv- en in his own words, was “to show, if I could, that I had not passed my life merely in making jokes, but that } had made use of whatever little powers of pleasantry I might be endowed with to discountenance bad and to enconrrage liberal and wise principles.’’ th this object he failed. His public services and wisdom have been forgotten. His jokes are remembered. His account of Dame Partington, who lived upon the ‘beach at Sidmouth and who was seen during a violent sterm trundling her mop, squeezing out the sea water and vigorously pusbing away the Atlantic ocean, is a household story which every one knows. The circum- stances in which it was told and the effect produced by it have passed out of mind. It was at the end of a long agitation for political reform in England when the house of lords had thrown out the great measure of Lord John Russell, which had been carried through the commons. Sydney Smith, the political Panoh aoe, eral principles and reform measures for many years, told. this story at a politi- cal meeting im Taunton, at which speeches were made protesting against the action of the lords. It caught the public fancy, and within a week every- body in England was laughing over it. Mrs. Partington’s mop battle with the tempest tossed Atlantic portrayed the lords’ futile struggle with Exglish pub- lic opinion. That funny story was prob- ably more effective than the most elo- quent argument in disarming mobs, preventing a breach of the. pesce and converting hostility to the lords bt. good natured contempt. ‘The Atlantic ocean beat Mrs. Partington.’’ During the 60 years which preceded the Victorian reign Sydney Smith was almost the only prominent English clergyman who was interested in re- form movements, and in his writings for the Edinburgh Review he succeeded by his wit in presenting the dullest ar- gument with freshness aad force. Wit with him was the vehicle which carried good sense and wisdom. He has been in his grave 60 years, and his reputation is that of a clerical joker. He expected thata tablet would be erected to his memory in St. Paul’s ca- thedral, London, where as canon he was a favorite preacher at the close of his tife. There is no memorial tablet there, nor is there one at either Fostcn or Combe-Florey, the two parishes where most of his work was done. His jokes have survivecé not only his writ- ings, but his services as a reformer who loved religious toleration and political liberty as the breath of his life. What his career proves is that wit is )} one of the most powerful weapons in the world. Without it he would have exerted very much less influence asa writer or a preacher in politics With it his name has been handed down as one of the great Englishmen ef his tine. rnc | oC ee eee SS OR SALE. RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J.J, Gay and son situate in the village of Pownai, 7 miles from vharlottetown, is offered for sale. The pro- rietors have carried up a large market gar- en pursery, and seed business for thirty years, and the purchaser will no Goubtfetain aay a of the Local ee. ms. prem- ses comprise a large dw ouse, s'ore warehouse, barn. shed, orchard, and about 15 acres Of the most ferti.e land on the Isjand This land hasbeen manured year after year, for so long that as 29 vid man said the other day.; “It isall a of mapure and could,be hauled for top-dressing.” This would be an ideal spot for @ country mereh- ant. or it id be admirabie @ summer resort, situation is one Of the most beautiful on the Island. _ Good bathing, fishing. boating, shooting and within easy distance; churches, post office scho>) telephone and sbops all at the door. For terms and further particulars, apply to Yon Clure Gay, J J Ger & son or to, JOHN T MKLLISH Solicitor Charlottetown d&v oct 7 — -— TO LET. A comfortable dwelling ‘on Dor- chester St, containing’ eight rooms. Immediate possession given. Rent moderate’ Apply “ARTHUR G. PEAKE, Office on Peake’s Wharf. oct 21-6 MISS #. McDONALD FANCY DANCES, inclndimg Highland Fling, Flag Dance, Strathspey, Spanish Dance, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Villiagers Dance, Skirt Dance, Audalucia, etc. For this seeron ouly these dances $5 each, being ove third of price. Rooms in Masonic Building. wepi30 parson who had been advocating Lib- | Rds | Senet then, STOVES. oO Wighland Ranges ard Jewrel Stoves Stand First in Public Favor, Ty ja Law > om We are agents for these two celebrated makes af Stoves ————o FENNEL & CHANDLER, 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned repaired, nickeled or enameled, thorou-bly renewed, ready for spring. ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) that money can buy in New York, and éaée it on in a manner that” the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the same. | as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop, W. P. DOULL, Kent Street WEDDING RINGS THAT W. | I am showing a nice line A Plain Gold Rings ia ate heavy weights, ' % Wedding Presents 3 [am opening to-day a new and aia line of Silverware, as good ag the bast, and as cheap, we believe, as the raul ; est. Your trade will be .mut a helpful. e LG. F, HUTBHESD The Queen Street Jeweler, ee setae 2 Cold Weather Footwear | £ - % 4 * % * * Big supply of big Felt Boots. Elastic Felt side for 85c Landlng to-day ex Steamer “Irene Morris,” direct from Liverpool,. be SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITRATE OF SODA,: MURIATE OF POTASH, BOWE MEAL, ETC. All genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The oniy reliable, best, and st east 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on the market. AULD BROS. SS —s — —-— > = BIRD CAGES | ° IN a BRASS AND PINTE Extra bottie and springs. Wire rat traps, for anothet : kind of bird. SIMON W CRABB) i Walker's Corner 187 STOVES & EARDWARE {[aerw ata a”. S¥sePrecenm ale a0 7) Pm 27224276